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  2. NetWare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NetWare

    NetWare [2] is a discontinued computer network operating system developed by Novell, Inc. It initially used cooperative multitasking to run various services on a personal computer, using the IPX network protocol. The final update release was version 6.5SP8 in May 2009 [3], and it has since been replaced by Open Enterprise Server. [4]

  3. Open Enterprise Server - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Enterprise_Server

    OES 11 was released on 12 December 2011 based on SLES 11 SP1 64-bit. The NetWare Kernel was removed after OES 2. This is the first version of OES to be 64-bit (x86_64) only. NetWare 6.5 SP8 was still possible to run as a 32-bit only para-virtualized guest inside the Xen hypervisor. Introduces Novell Kanaka for Mac client

  4. Talk:NetWare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:NetWare

    NetWare as included with OES is 32-bit NetWare 6.5, no more, no less. OES has the ability to run it virtualized - as a 32-bit guest on a 32-bit or 64-bit hypervisor - but still as 32-bit. Likewise, iFolder 3.x never shipped as a NetWare component; iFolder 3.x was only ever available under the OES Linux kernel, again, as referenced above.

  5. NetWare Loadable Module - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NetWare_Loadable_Module

    A NetWare Loadable Module [1] [2] [3] (NLM) is a loadable kernel module (a binary code module) that can be loaded into Novell's NetWare operating system. NLMs can implement hardware drivers, server functions (e.g. clustering), applications (e.g. GroupWise), system libraries or utilities.

  6. Novell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Novell

    The initial release of NetWare 4 came with compatibility problems for some NetWare 3 users, and large enterprises were faced with an upgrade-all-or-upgrade-none decision. [58] However some 40 million users declined to move to NetWare 4, with the result that Novell lost large amounts of possible revenue in upgrades. [101]

  7. GroupWise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GroupWise

    Other new features included World Wide Web links in objects, the ability for third-party developers to create and maintain items, tighter Netware integration and management, SNMP capabilities, live maintenance without the need to shut down the server, an integrated listserver, and the ability to access the system remotely via touch-tone telephone.

  8. Comparison of operating systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_operating...

    Apple silicon (11-present), x86-64 (10.4.7–present), IA-32 (10.4.4–10.6.8), PowerPC (10.0–10.5.8) (see also iOS for ARM) HFS+ (default on hard drives, and on flash drives up to Sierra), APFS (default on flash drives in High Sierra), HFS, UFS, AFP, ISO 9660, FAT, UDF, NFS, SMBFS, NTFS (read only), FTP , WebDAV , ZFS (experimental)

  9. ZENworks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZENworks

    The name, "ZENworks", first appeared as "Z.E.N.works" in 1998 with ZENworks 1.0 [4] and with ZENworks Starter Pack - a limited version of ZENworks 1.0 that came bundled with NetWare 5.0 (1998). Novell added server-management functionality, and the product grew into a suite consisting of: "ZENworks for Desktops" (ZfD)